If you are paying interest on a credit card balance, a large slice of every repayment can vanish into interest rather than reducing what you actually owe. A balance transfer card is designed to break that cycle: it lets you move the debt to a new card with a 0% interest period, so for a while your repayments chip away at the balance itself. Used carefully, it is one of the most effective tools for clearing card debt faster. Used carelessly, it can simply move the problem around. This guide explains how balance transfers work, the fees and traps to watch, and how to make one pay off. This is general information, not financial advice.
What it is
A balance transfer card is a credit card that lets you move an existing balance from one or more other cards onto it, usually with a promotional 0% interest period. During that promotional window — which might run for several months to a couple of years — you are charged little or no interest on the transferred amount.
The appeal is simple. On a standard card charging interest, much of a minimum payment can go on interest, so the balance barely shrinks. Move that balance to a 0% card and, for the length of the offer, your payments reduce the debt itself. That is the same principle behind the wider truth that the less interest you pay, the faster and cheaper any borrowing clears — UK lender Credicorp has a plain-English explainer on how chipping away faster cuts the total cost of borrowing, and a 0% transfer is one way to put that idea to work.
How a balance transfer works
The mechanics are straightforward:
- You apply for a balance transfer card and, if accepted, are given a credit limit.
- You request a transfer, telling the new provider which card balance (or balances) to pay off and how much to move.
- The new card pays off the old debt, and that amount now sits on the new card instead.
- You repay the new card during the 0% period, ideally clearing it before the promotional rate ends.
You usually cannot transfer a balance between two cards from the same banking group, and there is normally a limit on how much you can move — often a percentage of your new credit limit. Most transfers also need to be completed within a set window after opening the account (for example, the first 60 or 90 days) to qualify for the promotional rate.
The fees and the catch
Balance transfer cards are not quite "free money", and two features deserve close attention.
The transfer fee. Most balance transfers carry a one-off fee, typically a small percentage of the amount you move, added to your balance. So moving £3,000 with a 3% fee adds £90 to what you owe. A few cards advertise no fee, but they often come with a shorter 0% period. The right choice depends on your sums: a longer 0% deal with a fee can still beat a short fee-free one if you need more time.
The end of the 0% period. This is the big one. When the promotional period ends, any remaining balance starts attracting the card's standard interest rate, which is usually much higher. If you have not cleared the debt, the savings can evaporate quickly. The whole strategy rests on clearing the balance within the offer, or being ready to act before it ends.
| Element | What to check |
|---|---|
| 0% period length | How long you have before interest applies |
| Transfer fee | The one-off percentage cost of moving the balance |
| Standard rate after | What you will pay on anything left over |
| Transfer deadline | The window to make the transfer and qualify |
| New spending rate | Purchases are often not at 0% |
Using one well
A balance transfer card rewards discipline. To get the most from it:
- Divide and conquer. Work out the monthly payment needed to clear the balance within the 0% period — for example, a £2,400 balance over 24 months is £100 a month — and aim to pay at least that, set up as a standing order or direct debit so you never miss it.
- Avoid new spending on the card. Purchases are often charged at a higher rate and may not be covered by the 0% offer, which complicates how payments are applied. Treat the card as a debt-clearing tool, not a spending one.
- Never miss the minimum payment. A missed payment can cause you to lose the 0% deal entirely, snapping you back to the standard rate. Always pay at least the minimum on time.
- Keep an eye on the end date. If you will not clear the balance in time, look into transferring the remainder again before the rate jumps — though new applications come with their own checks.
- Do not see freed-up credit as a windfall. Clearing one card and then running it back up leaves you worse off, with more debt across more cards.
This last point is the heart of it: a balance transfer buys you breathing room and cheaper repayments, but it does not, by itself, reduce your debt. The reduction comes from the payments you make. Pairing it with a realistic budget is what turns the offer into genuine progress, and if your debts span several cards and loans, debt consolidation may be worth comparing too.
Your credit score and eligibility
Applying for a balance transfer card involves a hard credit check, which leaves a footprint on your credit file and can nudge your score down slightly. The best 0% deals also tend to go to applicants with stronger credit histories, so it pays to understand where you stand. To avoid unnecessary marks, use a provider's eligibility checker where available: these run a soft credit check that shows your likely chances without affecting your score. If your credit history could be stronger, our guide to improving your credit score sets out practical steps that can widen your options over time.
A balance transfer is a credit product, so the usual responsible-borrowing principles apply: borrow only what you can realistically repay, read the terms in full, and remember that a 0% period is temporary.
For free, impartial debt and money guidance, MoneyHelper and Citizens Advice are excellent and independent, and the Financial Conduct Authority regulates UK credit card providers.
The bottom line
A balance transfer card moves existing credit card debt to a new card with a 0% interest period, so your repayments can reduce the balance instead of feeding interest. The catches are the one-off transfer fee and the fact that the 0% rate is temporary — anything left when it ends reverts to a much higher rate. Used with discipline, by paying enough each month, avoiding new spending and clearing the balance before the offer ends, it is a powerful way to get out of card debt faster and cheaper. Just remember it is a tool to help you clear debt, not a way to make it disappear.